Greece on the frontline 
 
  
    By Nikos Konstandaras
 The international intervention in Libya’s civil war has put Greece on  the front line of developments in our region.
 Our geographic position  alone is enough to give us a leading role, but Greece has to play an  active role as well; it must take serious decisions and act very  carefully on the diplomatic front so as to avoid the traps and reap the  benefits from this involvement. 
The stakes are very high and they  concern our geostrategic importance and our diplomatic capital in all  our international relations.
In recent wars involving our allies,  Greece was able to fulfill its obligations as a partner either with a  minimal and unobtrusive presence (as in Kosovo and Afghanistan) or  simply through allowing the use of its facilities (as in the case of  Iraq) without really taking a stand. 
In Libya’s case, though, it is  obliged to stand firmly with its European partners and the United States  against an old friend of Greece’s ruling party, Muammar Gadhafi. 
Crete  is just 300 kilometers from Libya at their closest point, and the Souda  Bay naval and air facilities on the island are an important staging  point for all kinds of activity in Libya. NATO facilities at Aktio and  Larissa will also play a crucial role in enforcing a no-fly zone over  Libya.
But it is not just geography that drives events in this  case. France and Britain, two important European Union partners, went  out on a limb in recent weeks, pressing the United States to agree to a  military intervention that would stop the Libyan government forces’  advance against the rebels. French President Nicolas Sarkozy even went  so far as to recognize the rebels’ government on March 10. As the rebels  retreated and seemed sure to lose, France was at a diplomatic impasse.
 
At this point, it would be impossible for Athens to draw back from  supporting its strongest EU ally in the ongoing negotiations on a way  out of Greece’s economic crisis.
The road toward military  intervention began a week ago, when the Arab League threw its weight  behind calls for the United Nations to impose a no-fly zone over Libya.  
Gadhafi’s military victory seemed assured -- and it was also clear that  this would result in a prolonged period of instability, as the Libyan  leader’s use of military force against his own people had stripped him  of all legitimacy. Indicative of his intentions was the declaration he  made on Thursday, when he warned the rebels in their stronghold at  Benghazi that “tonight we will enter to strike against the traitors. We  will show no mercy.”
 A few hours later, after a change of heart by the  United States, the UN Security Council imposed a no-fly zone over Libya.  Tripoli’s immediate reaction was to threaten “air and maritime  transport in the Mediterranean as well as civilian and military  facilities.” Fortunately for Crete, in an agreement that it signed with  the international community in 2003, Libya had committed itself to  destroying all of its missiles whose range would enable them to reach  the island.
The most hopeful scenario would be for the  international intervention to lead quickly to a political solution --  perhaps with the resignation of Gadhafi in exchange for amnesty, as the  rebels have offered.
 
Greece could mediate in such a negotiation because  of its close ties with Gadhafi in the past -- ties which were confirmed  in recent weeks with Greece’s prominent role in the emergency evacuation  of tens of thousands of foreign workers and in achieving the release of  three Dutch soldiers who had been captured by Libyan forces. 
Turkey  also has been playing an active role, but its stand against NATO  military action when Athens was offering facilities and airpower could  marginalize it in the weeks ahead.
I
t is clear that Greece has an  important role to play as a pole of stability and as a NATO beachhead  from the Maghreb to Israel. The USA is aware of this, and perhaps this  is why it has supported Greece so firmly in its negotiations with the  IMF and our EU partners. 
Let us hope that at the EU summit this week our  partners will acknowledge the fact that Greece is an invaluable partner  on many fronts beyond that of the economy, and that they will  understand that helping Greece recover is an investment in the future of  this very important and very unstable part of the world.
                            
ekathimerini.com , Sunday  March 20, 2011 (19:01)  
***
Una buona analisi.
Da leggere.